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Virginia WoolfA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Throughout her essay, Woolf makes use of imagery to help the reader grasp concepts that are fundamentally abstract. In the first paragraph, she conjures up quotidian scenes of a common life including “women gossiping,” “trees rustling,” and “donkey braying” (1). She goes on to compare these ordinary moments to the amalgamation of books on a shelf in a library, acquired from all different places for all different reasons. Woolf draws in her reader with these images, giving examples of commonalities they may have experienced, points of entry to her essay that they can grasp onto.
The kind of library that she portrays offers a vast choice of genre. In differentiating the many genres and how one should understand them, she states that expecting the same results from poems, novels, and biographies is like expecting the same from a tiger, a tortoise, and an elephant. This simile not only paints a picture but also emphasizes the flexibility that reading requires, as Woolf argues. These images are essential to her theme of The Critical Freedom of the Individual, since she argues that the personal approach to reading is tantamount.
By Virginia Woolf
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A Room of One's Own
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Between The Acts
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Jacob's Room
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Kew Gardens
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Modern Fiction
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Moments of Being
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Mrs. Dalloway
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Orlando
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The Death of the Moth
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The Duchess and the Jeweller
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The Lady in the Looking Glass
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The Mark on the Wall
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The New Dress
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The Voyage Out
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The Waves
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Three Guineas
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To the Lighthouse
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